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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1955)
Annual tnttallatlon bt Gold Hill Lodge ar for January 1 1 Gold Hill The last meeting of Amethyst Rebekah lodge was conducted by the vice-grand, Mrs. Fred Lester, in the absence of the noble grand, Mrs. JV Les Graffis who was away for the holidays. Mrs. Lester has ,been elected noble grand and will be installed January 11 at the joint installation of Rebekahs and Odd Fellows. A team from' the IOOF lodge of Medford will in stall -the new officers. ; . iub icauiuuua cuangiug meet- tag nights from Mondays to Wednesdays will be read again and voted on at the January . 10 meetings All Rebekahs are urged to attend this meeting. Commit tee working on the resolution Mrs. Wilmer Bailey and Mrs. jesrer parser. Mrs. Lester ap pointed a committee for installa tion. - ' ' : - , 9 Refreshment committee will be chairman, Mrs. Wilbur Mar tin; Mrs. Nina Dusenberry,- Mrs Roy Bornamann, Mrs. Ferd Jones and Mrs. Harry Newnham in. cnarge ox decorations are Mrs. Joe Lewis, Mrs. John Cogs- wen and Mrs. Clyde Kell. .After lodge those having birth days in December were honored. Refreshments were served by - v. V Wedding News Announced Here Sams Valley Announcement has been made of the wedding of Judith. Anna Frakes, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Frake, Keokuk, la., to Charles Laisle, son of Mrs. Max Payne, Sams Valley. The wedding took place Christ mas day with the Rev. Paul D. Olson reading the ceremony at First Lutheran church. The young people, both grad uates of Keokuk High school, will live in that city after a honeymoon insouthern Mis souri. Junior Lodge Plans Meeting on Saturday A New Year's party has been planned for the next meeting of Junior Degree of Honor accord ing to the director, Mrs. H. G. Wilson. The meeting is set for Saturday, January 8, at 10 a.m. in Lincoln school. Members are asked to bring friends. . 5 Mrs. Ferd Jones,' Mrs." William Fields and Mrs. James Clement. Couple Attends Golden Wedding Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Hamilton, Arnold lane, have returned from Winnemucca, Nev., where they attended a party which cele brated the gold , wedding anni versary of Mr. and Mrs. Bert A. Hamilton. The trip was made in the com pany of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Ham ilton, Sacramento, Calif. The three men are brothers. Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Stewart, Coos Bay, son-in-law and daugh ter of the Medford couple,' spent the Christmas holidays here. : f . ; Graduate Nurse On Hospital Staff Miss Jean Nelson, who spent the past three weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Nel son, 1173 Vawter road, has re turned to Portland. Miss Nelson, a recent graduate of the Uni versity of Oregon school of nurs ing, will be on the staff of Mult nomah County- hospital. . . Miss Nelson was graduated from Medford High school with the class of 1950. " -. v V Grange Council. Jackson County Grange Coun cil will meet at the Gold Hill Grange hall Saturday, Jan. 8, at 8 p.m. .- , Ladies are asked to please bring sandwiches or cookies. ! , . ' - . . . ' S & H GREEN STAMPS - ALL DEPTS. K GOOD DEEF lb.(gg)0 U. S. Inspected 1 - : MORRELL'S - PALACE BRAND JLDCEPBaCODKI' GOOD BEEF INSP. POT ROASTS ARM AND BLADE CUTS SIRLOIN & RIB . CUTS MEAL' steaks LARGE SNOW WHITE (SAyyiFLOffiJiiis . each LARGE SIZE SALTON SEA FOR 21s EXTRA FANCY DELICIOUS APPLES lb. JUMBO SIZE AVOCADOS 2" OTTERBROOK ((M teem leaoiis $S $51 303 Tim SUNSHINE S-lb. Pkg. Krispy Crackers ... ... .39c HYDROX 12-Ox. Pkg. Cookies ............ V39c SUNSHINE CANDY ' 14ttz. Pkg. Orange Slices . v. .. 29c Wesson Oil ... ...qtv 65c WHITE KINO or lg. pkg. 2SM CHILI CON CARNE V with BEANS No. 303 Can for ftOO :.'.( DEL MONTE ORANGE JUICE 46-ox. Tin 2m EXCLUSIVE WITH US RANCH EGGS From , DOXAN'S POULTRY FARM 526 SOUTH RIVERSIDE ; Family Party Held At John Payne Home Sams Valley Among tne holl- day parties was one held at the home of John Payne, Ramsey canyon. . Guests were - Mr. and Mrs. Max Payne, Howard Payne and two children,' Dick Payne, Los Angeles, and G e r a ldine Payne, Central Point; Mr. and Mrs. Guy Payne and two chil dren, Royce and Rowena, Med ford and Frank Payne, Albany, Calif., Gifts were exchanged. . ; f Return Mr. and Mrs. Glen Duysen and sons, Larry and Kent, re turned Tuesday from California where they spent the holidays. The family visited relatives in Bellflower and Long Beach. Basic Beauty bVvlll 9295 12-20:40 Oh, what wonderful f thines this new line does for your fig ure! Just picture the pretty flare of. the 8-gore skirt makes your waist look so small! Best of all, this dress is casual enough to wear four days out of seven dressy enough for . a dance. Sew tt how! '" Pattern 9295: Misses Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20,- 40. Size 16 takes 4 yards 35-inch fabric, j This easy-to-use pattern gives perfect fit. Complete, illustrated Sew Chart shows you every step. Send Tnixty-nv cents in coins for this pattern add 5 cents for each pattern for lst-class mail ing. Send to Marian Martin, care of Medford Mail Tribune, Pat tern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with SIZE and STYLE NUMBER.- k Jiffy Wrapron! MM 7022 SOB Sew a jiffy, wrapon trim with gay embroidery. Flower basket pocket nothing prettier! Make two styles long and short! v-.' ; Pattern 7622: tissue pattern, motifs, directions for wrapon. Sizes Small (10, 12), Medium (14, 16); Large (18, 20). State size. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in coins for this patternadd 5 cents for -each pattern "for lst class mailing. Send to Medford Mail Tribune, Household Arts Dept., P. O. Box 168, Old Chel sea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, PATTERN NUMBER and SIZE. WONDERFUL is the word tor our ? NEW s Alice Brooks Needlecraft Catalog fori 1955. Exciting, enchahting--our new designs are all that nd: even more! Send 25 cents for our copy of this terrific catalog NOW! , You'll .4 want - to order every wonderful design in iu Thondar, January 8, ItSS MZDPORD (OKSOOa) MAS. Money Easy to Spend inNew York; illipn Dollar Diamond Tops list By ELIZABETH TOOMEY United Press Correspondent New York XU.R) If a man were to ? kiss his i wife on tne cheek at 10 ajn. during a visit to New York and say, ? "Now, dear, go out and . buy the most expensive thing you can find," what do you suppose she'd bring back at the end of the day? : A man gave me a similar sug gestion with two important omissions. The omissions were the kiss on the cheek, the man was . my . boss and 'the f word buy.". He said go out and find the most expensive personal item a woman could buy in New York. With instructions like that a woman can let her imagination run riot.- Mine ran - first to a yacht. But it seems yachts, now in stock, don't : come close ; to equalling the price of a couple of other things a woman can buy here. i 'A -i - .- 'A quarter of ?a million dol lars is a lot to spend on a yacht these days," a yacht broker said. Seems those fabulous 300-foot yachts that rich men V once cruised around in-are just not built any moTe. ii :... Has Used Yacht ! "We have a - used , 125-foot yacht for $250,000," the yacht man said. "Maybe less, if you're interested." We said we were looking for something nicer1 and left. - ' ' : i--'"-. Naturally the woman with un limited . funds will, head for the nearest furrier. But it's hard to spend a lot tf money on one coat, strange as it seems..? When the sky's the limit, it is absolute ly unbelieveable how quickly a mink coat seems like a bargain! . A Russian sable - coat with a $22,000 price; tag was the most all made up and ready to wear, expensive coat we could find The most expensive mink"; was a shade called blue iris, priced at $12,000. .a- i; Then there were knicknacks like ., a $275. alligator handbag and a capeskin and camel's hair laprobe at $195 and a new living room couch designed by Charles James priced at - $1,140. .). We couldn't even find a color tele vision set in stock - that - cost more than $895. Some art object might be nice, a woman is bound to decide, to brighten up the living room. v Tapestries at $500,000 We were offered a set of tap estries at $500,000 "more or less" at French and company, a dealer in' rare ''"furnishings and art objects. The man who made the offer seemed to know he wasn't about to sell the four Couples Here ; Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Chase, Ephrata, Wash., and Mr. and Mrs. Orin Chase, Salem, Ore., left Medford Tuesday after hav ing been guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Wendt, Old Stage road. Mrs. A. R. Chase is a sister, of Mr. Wendt. ' , The two couples were en route to California for a winter vaca tion. ' " " " Flemish gothie tapestries that date back to around 1500. -. - "In the old days somebody like . J. P. Morgan might : have bought them," he said. "Now we rarely sell an item like this to an individual in this country. The tapestries' will be bought either by a museum or by an in dividual from Europe." - We figured that half a million dollar purchase to hang on the living room walls might, be the best we could do in a day but that was before dropping in on Harry Winston, a man who deals in rare diamonds. Mr.- Winston, a small, genial man who was -wearing a somber brown suit, heard about the half million dollar buy and said, "Poof! Here: you are in a real Cinderella world.' ' - - - -; $400,000 And Up ; ' " Whereupon an assistant opened a vault and brought forth sbme black Velvet cases. "An absolutely perfect blue diamond, 40 carats," Winston said, opening a square"' case to show a marquis-cut stone that glittered j in countless tiny prisms from, its - black velvet nest. , Then came the' 62-carat Win ston diamond at $600,000, an emerald cut diamond necklace priced at $1,000,000 and finally the most expensive item of all. '- "Well over a million," Win ston said. . -: " ' ' : 'r.r ' It was the Hope diamond, a famous blue stone weighing 44 V4 carats which Winston has set in a necklace containing scores of smaller diamonds. ' : That ended that shopping trip. A woman's sales resistance can take only so 1 much wear and tear. m-4 CALENDAR - Calenda notice and aewf for the Society section of The Mail Tribune must be submitted in writing and' deadline for the Sun day edition la 1 cm. Friday. Dead line for-the weekly calendar, ia S ajn. of the day of publication, and for week day-news ia 5 DJa- the day before publication. Thursday - '---.----T:f 7:30 pjn. ' Royal Neighbors of" America, Pythian building. 8 p.m. Adarel chapter, OES, Jacksonville Masonic hall. 8 p.m. United Nations group, YMCA-balcony room. 8 p.m. Central Point PTA, Junior. High, school, library. 8 p.m. Phoenix Neighbors of Woodcraft, Grange hall. . . . . ,s. Friday 11 a.m. Griffon Creek Exten sion unit, home of . Mrs. Joe Johnson, 106 Crater Lake ave nue. 11 a.m. Medford Truth cen ter (Unity), Room 203, Holly Theater building. , 1:30 p.m. Jolly Stitchers, Mrs. Harry Bryant, 1312 Reddy avenue. ' WEATHER By United Press Northern California: Fair ex cept cloudiness - extreme south ern interior. KELVI NATO R AN NOU NCES A New Totally "Automatic Washer With 2 Separate Vashing Cycles I Hfc- 111 M SISNAL USMTS fMOW lh Bke having two eoteety sep , rate Automatic Washers. The new . 1955 Kelvinator lias, two complete, totally automatic cycles. Dial "Regular Fabrics",. far the ideal washing cycle for regular and heavily soiled laun dry. Or dial "Fine Fabrics" for V 'been, nylons or for lighter 'loads. And yort save almost half the time and half the and water, too. wjsiciatBMata sssshsi RaMs I sans! shoot v I MSMBW SBS, M cosMs I afar "Tal-A-f boc- inssiMcde.$ia(tei oparaboR sf both eydtt. Hh i wMi Ismsoeat feodiigtt. W Down A SATISFACTION GUARANTEED VOX YOUR MONEY : REFUNDED JOHNSTON STORES A Safo Place ToBuy AppiancM 112 SOUTH RIVERSIDE mssstsr sdios beass with toatentisted ssds, Men stas- "X-CENTRIC AUTATMir om' continuoK wbfaboj kdHos is ftntte, completely safe. . - " top of ; Nl JANUARY- CLEARANCE us oii Si 6 ALL SHOES IN OUR JANUARY CLEARANCE ARE FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK BROKEN LOTS i A GOOD SELECTION IN EVERY SIZE AAAA TO C - 4 TO 10 " RED CROSS yf Black -Brown Green - Red -. Calf and Suede - : Leathers Oxfords . Pumps , Straps A REAL OPPORTUNITY TO SAVE ON THESE FAMOUS SHOES REG. PRICE $10.95 to $12.95 S5 ONE GROUP V . LOW HEEL CASUALS Red Green Black Tan - - t - - -; w ' i . ... i 2 i - - v- $n95 REG. to $10.95 SALE 75 pr. LOW HEEL OXFORDS AND LOAFERS BROKEN LOTS" $ REG. to $8.95 9S - Sale Opons 9 A.fvi. Friday All Sales Final NO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDS - - - ' Buy That Extra Pair of Shoes' - at Thcw Substantial Savings!, .v rui n u u L-a 1 j o "So. Oregon's Oldest Shoa Concern" 221 E. MAIN PHONE 2-2123